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Hidden cameras that film injustice in the world’s most dangerous places

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    I would like to start
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    with the story of Mary,
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    a woman from an African village.
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    Her first memories
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    are of her family fleeing violent riots
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    orchestrated by
    the ruling political party.
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    Her brother was murdered
    by the state-sponsored militia,
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    and she was raped more than once
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    just because she belonged
    to the wrong party.
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    One morning, a month before the election,
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    Mary's village was called
    to another intimidation meeting.
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    In this meeting, there is a man
    standing in front of them,
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    telling them, "We know who you are,
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    we know who you will vote for,
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    and if you're not going
    to drop the right paper,
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    we're going to take revenge."
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    But for Mary, this meeting is different.
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    She feels different.
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    This time, she's waiting for this meeting,
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    because this time, she's carrying
    a small hidden camera in her dress,
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    a camera that nobody else can see.
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    Nobody is allowed to film
    in these meetings.
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    You risk your life if you do.
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    Mary knows that, but she also knows
    that the only way to stop them
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    and to protect herself and her community
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    is to expose their intimidation,
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    to make sure they understand
    somebody is following them,
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    to break the impunity they feel.
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    Mary and her friends were filming
    for months, undercover,
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    the intimidation of
    the ruling political party.
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    (Video) ["Filmed with hidden cameras"]
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    Man: We are now going to speak
    about the upcoming elections.
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    Nothing can stop us
    from doing what we want.
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    If we hear you are with [The Opposition]
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    we will not forgive you.
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    ["Militia intimidation rally"]
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    [The Party] can torture you at any time.
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    The youth can beat you.
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    ["Disruption of political meeting"]
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    For those who lie, saying they
    are back with [The Party],
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    your time is running out.
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    ["Party youth militia"]
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    Some have died because they rebelled.
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    Some have lost their homes.
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    If you don't work together
    with [The Party],
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    you will lead a very bad life.
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    Oren Yakobovich: These images
    were broadcast all over the world,
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    but more importantly,
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    they have been broadcast
    back to the community.
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    The perpetrators saw them too.
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    They understood somebody
    is following them.
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    They got scared. Impunity was broken.
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    Mary and her friends forced
    the ruling political party
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    not to use violence during the election,
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    and saved hundreds of lives.
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    Mary is just one of hundreds of people
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    that my organization had helped
    to document human rights violations
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    using cameras.
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    My background should have
    led me to a different direction.
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    I was born in Israel
    to a right-wing family,
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    and as long as I remember myself,
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    I wanted to join the Israeli army
    to serve my country
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    and prove what I believed
    was our right for the whole land.
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    I joined the Israeli army
    just after the first intifada,
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    the first Palestinian uprising,
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    and I served in one of the hard-minded,
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    toughest, aggressive infantry units,
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    and I got the biggest gun in my platoon.
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    Quite fast, I became an officer
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    and got soldiers under my command,
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    and as time passed, I started
    serving in the West Bank,
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    and I saw these images.
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    I didn't like what I saw.
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    It took me a while,
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    but eventually I refused
    to serve in the West Bank
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    and had to spend time in jail.
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    It was a bit —
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    (Applause) —
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    It was not that bad, I have to say.
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    It was a bit like being in a hotel,
    but with very shitty food.
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    (Laughter)
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    In jail, I kept thinking
    that I need people to know.
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    I need people to understand
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    what the reality
    in the West Bank looks like.
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    I need them to hear what I heard,
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    I need them to see what I saw,
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    but I also understood, we need
    the Palestinians themselves,
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    the people that are suffering,
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    to be able to tell their own stories,
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    not journalists or filmmakers
    that are coming outside of the situation.
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    I joined a human rights organization,
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    an Israeli human rights
    organization called B'Tselem.
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    Together, we analyzed the West Bank
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    and picked 100 families that
    are living in the most risky places:
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    close to checkpoints, near army bases,
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    side by side with settlers.
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    We gave them cameras and training.
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    Quite fast, we started getting
    very disturbing images
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    about how the settlers
    and the soldiers are abusing them.
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    I would like to share with you
    two clips from this project.
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    Both of them were broadcast in Israel,
    and it created a massive debate.
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    And I have to warn you,
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    some of you might
    find them quite explicit.
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    The masked men you
    will see in the first clips
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    are Jewish settlers.
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    Minutes before the camera was turned on,
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    they approached a Palestinian family
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    that was working their land
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    and told them that they
    have to leave the land,
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    because this land belongs
    to the Jewish settlers.
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    The Palestinians refused.
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    Let's see what happened.
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    The masked men that are approaching
    are Jewish settlers.
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    They are approaching
    the Palestinian family.
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    This is a demonstration in the West Bank.
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    The guy in green is Palestinian.
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    He will be arrested in a second.
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    Here you see him
    blindfolded and handcuffed.
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    In a few seconds, he regrets
    he came to this demonstration.
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    He's been shot in the foot
    with a rubber bullet.
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    He is okay.
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    Not all the settlers and the soldiers
    are acting this way.
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    We're talking about a tiny minority,
    but they have to be brought to justice.
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    These clips, and others like them,
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    forced the army and the police
    to start investigations.
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    They've been shown in Israel, of course,
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    and the Israeli public
    was exposed to them also.
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    This project redefined
    the struggle for human rights
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    in the occupied territories,
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    and we managed to reduce the number
    of violent attacks in the West Bank.
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    The success of this project
    got me thinking
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    how I can take the same methodology
    to other places in the world.
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    Now, we tend to believe that today,
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    with all of the technology,
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    the smartphones and the Internet,
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    we are able to see and understand
    most of what's happening in the world,
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    and people are able to tell their story —
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    but it's only partly true.
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    Still today, with all
    the technology we have,
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    less than half of the world's population
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    has access to the Internet,
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    and more than three billion people —
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    I'm repeating the number —
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    three billion people are consuming news
    that is censored by those in power.
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    More or less around the same time,
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    I'm approached by a great guy
    named Uri Fruchtmann.
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    He's a filmmaker and an activist.
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    We understood we were
    thinking along the same lines,
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    and we decided to establish Videre,
    our organization, together.
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    While building the organization in London,
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    we've been traveling undercover to places
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    where a community
    was suffering from abuses,
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    where mass atrocities were happening,
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    and there was a lack of reporting.
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    We tried to understand how we can help.
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    There were four things that I learned.
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    The first thing is that we have to engage
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    with communities that are
    living in rural areas,
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    where violations are happening
    far from the public eye.
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    We need to partner with them,
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    and we need to understand which images
    are not making it out there
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    and help them to document them.
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    The second thing I learned
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    is that we have to enable them
    to film in a safe way.
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    Security has to be the priority.
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    Where I used to work before,
    in the West Bank,
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    one can take a camera out,
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    most likely not going to get shot,
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    but in places we wanted to work,
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    just try to pull a phone out,
    and you're dead — literally dead.
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    This is why we decided
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    to take the operation undercover
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    when necessary,
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    and use mostly hidden cameras.
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    Unfortunately, I can't show you
    the hidden cameras we're using today —
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    for obvious reasons —
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    but these are cameras we used before.
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    You can buy them off the shelf.
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    Today, we're building
    a custom-made hidden camera,
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    like the one that Mary was wearing
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    in her dress to film
    the intimidation meeting
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    of the ruling political party.
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    It's a camera that nobody can see,
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    that blends into the environment,
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    into the surroundings.
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    Now, filming securities go beyond
    using hidden cameras.
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    Being secure starts way before
    the activist is turning the camera on.
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    To keep our partners safe,
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    we work to understand
    the risk of every location
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    and of every shot before it's happened,
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    building a backup plan
    if something goes wrong,
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    and making sure
    we have everything in place
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    before our operations start.
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    The third thing I learned
    is the importance of verification.
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    You can have an amazing shot of atrocity,
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    but if you can't verify it,
    it's worth nothing.
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    Recently, like in the ongoing war
    in Syria or the war in Gaza,
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    we've seen images that are staged
    or brought from a different conflict.
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    This misinformation destroyed
    the credibility of the source,
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    and it's harmed the credibility of other
    reliable and trustworthy sources.
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    We use a variety of ways to make sure
    we can verify the information
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    and we can trust the material.
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    It starts with vetting the partners,
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    understanding who they are,
    and working with them very intensively.
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    How do you film a location?
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    You film road signs, you film watches,
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    you film newspapers.
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    We are checking maps, looking at maps,
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    double-checking the information,
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    and looking also at
    the metadata of the material.
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    Now, the fourth and the most
    important thing I learned
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    is how you use images
    to create a positive change.
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    To have an effect,
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    the key thing is how you use the material.
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    Today, we're working
    with hundreds of activists
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    filming undercover.
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    We work with them both to understand
    the situation on the ground
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    and which images
    are missing to describe it,
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    who are the ones that are
    influencing the situation,
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    and when to release the material
    to advance the struggle.
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    Sometimes, it's about
    putting it in the media,
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    mostly local ones, to create awareness.
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    Sometimes it's working
    with decision makers,
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    to change laws.
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    Sometimes, it's working with lawyers
    to use as evidence in court.
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    But more than often,
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    the most effective way
    to create a social change
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    is to work within the community.
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    I want to give you one example.
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    Fatuma is part of a network of women
    that are fighting abuses in Kenya.
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    Women in her community
    have been harassed constantly
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    on their way to school
    and on their way to work.
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    They are trying to change
    the behavior of the community from inside.
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    In the next clip,
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    Fatuma is taking us with her
    on her journey to work.
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    Her voice is superimposed
    on images that she filmed herself
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    using hidden cameras.
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    (Video) Fatuma Chiusiku:
    My name is Fatuma Chiusiku.
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    I'm 32 years old, a mother,
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    And Ziwa La Ng'Ombe is my home.
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    Each morning, I ride the mini-bus
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    Number 11.
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    But instead of a peaceful journey to work,
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    each day begins with fear.
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    Come with me now
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    and use my eyes
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    to feel what I feel.
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    As I walk, I think to myself:
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    Will I be touched?
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    Grabbed?
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    Violated by this conductor again?
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    Even the men inside
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    the way they look at me
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    touch my body, rub against me,
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    grab me,
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    and now, as I sit in my seat
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    I only wish my mind was full
    of thoughts for my day,
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    my dreams, my children at school,
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    but instead I worry about
    the moment when we will arrive
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    and I will be violated again.
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    OY: Today, there is a new front
    in the fight for human rights.
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    I used to carry a big gun.
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    Now, I am carrying this.
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    This is a much more powerful
    and much, much more effective weapon.
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    But we have to use its power wisely.
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    By putting the right images
    in the right hands at the right time,
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    we can truly create an impact.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Hidden cameras that film injustice in the world’s most dangerous places
Speaker:
Oren Yakobovich
Description:

To see is to believe, says Oren Yakobovich — which is why he helps everyday people use hidden cameras to film dangerous situations of violence, political fraud and abuse. His organization, Videre, uncovers, verifies and publicizes human-rights abuses that the world needs to witness.

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
14:35
  • 29
    00:01:23,738 --> 00:01:27,724
    Mary and her friends were filming
    for months, undercover,
    ->
    Mary and her friends were filming
    for a month, undercover,

English subtitles

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